This is the fourth installment in a devotional series I’m doing called “Keeping Christmas Well.” My human inspiration comes from Ebenezer Scrooge, the main character in Charles Dickens’ beloved classic, A Christmas Carol. My divine inspiration, as always, comes from Scripture. The example of Scrooge, who learned to “keep Christmas well,” helps us to reflect upon how we might do similarly — not just during Advent and Christmas but throughout the year, and not just in our private lives but in every part of life, including our work.

In the first four chapters, called “staves,” of A Christmas Carol, Ebenezer Scrooge is transformed through the visits of three “spirits,” the ghosts of Christmas past, present, and future. By showing Scrooge scenes of Christmas in these three time periods, he is empowered to leave behind his “scroogish” ways and to become a new man.

In Stave Five, after the transformation has happened, the very first thing we hear out of the mouth of the new Scrooge is: “I will live in the Past, the Present, and the Future!” Of course he is referring to what he has experienced about Christmas through the ghosts of Christmas past, present, and future. But, I would suggest that Scrooge’s proclamation is something that should be true for every Christian. We should live in the past, present, and future.

Consider the timely example of Advent. The season of Advent is one in which Christians look to the past, remembering Israel’s longing for a messiah. You might say we are living in the past. Yet, at the same time, Advent is a time for us to look to the future, to the time when Christ comes to fully bring God’s kingdom to earth. In Matthew 24:36-37, Jesus explained that the timing of his “coming” is a mystery known only to the Heavenly Father. In the Latin version of the New Testament, the word for “coming” is adventus, from which we get the word “Advent.” In the season of Advent, we are living in light of the future advent of Christ.

Yet, living in the past and future during Advent is meant to influence our experience in the present. By focusing on past and future, we get in touch with our own yearning for God and with our hope for Christ’s coming. Thus, in Advent we are living in the past, present, and future, all at once. The past anchors our lives to what God has done and said in history, most of all through Jesus Christ. The future raises our eyes above the struggles of this moment, kindling our hope for the time when God’s kingdom will fill the earth with his peace, justice, and salvation. In the present we experience the reality of God’s past actions and we get a foretaste of his future. God is with us right now, through his Spirit. Thus, like Ebenezer Scrooge, we ought to rise in the morning and proclaim, “I will live in the Past, the Present, and the Future!”

QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER:

In what ways might it be true that you live in the past?

In what ways do you live by faith in the present?

In what ways is your life today shaped by God’s future?

How might you live in past, present, and future today?

PRAYER:

Gracious God, once again, the example of Ebenezer Scrooge helps us to see your truth in a new way. Thank you for this unexpected gift.

Help me, Lord, to live in the past, to allow what you have done in the past to shape my life in every dimension.

Help me, Lord, to live in the present as I experience your reality and power through your Holy Spirit.

Help me, Lord, to live in the future, to be filled with confident hope for the coming of your kingdom.

As I live in the past, present, and future, may every part of my life be formed by your Spirit, so that I might live confidently, joyously, and hopefully. Amen.